Pardon me, but I'll answer in English.
We actually do a projection. We do a ten-year resource plan looking forward at the system. It's a baseline plan simply to say that these are the resources that exist today with projected retirements, what's there, and what the requirements are.
But it's done under the current environmental guidelines. Now we are in the process of adding to that and doing studies to look at what we call scenario analysis, in order to go forward and make certain assumptions on greenhouse gases in particular. We know that the intensity targets...and there's a timeline for certain intensity levels in the power industry with the large final emitter trading program. But we think that's still evolving, and the regulations aren't absolutely written yet that make clear what the exact impact is going to be.
So we are going to do analysis to look at different levels of reductions in greenhouse gases.
Then what are some of the alternatives that could be put into the system? Again, we discussed this with our board of directors, and the board is very interested in what this might be. But we are not the entity responsible for the resource mix in New Brunswick. That will be the responsibility of the New Brunswick Power Corporation. Our responsibility is reliability. But to the extent that the mix of fuels could potentially have a security issue on fuel supply for different sources, we're very concerned about that, and we'd look at that.
We are doing studies on climate change, greenhouse gas emissions, and what options there are, as an information policy input to the government and others in the marketplace, so they can make business decisions as to what's likely going forward.